Evil Empath by Everlastingness
Evil Empath by Everlastingness is timeless atmospheric industrial music that overturns your expectations for modern experimental electronics, going back to the basics of early industrial in a way that’s refreshing. Think echoing percussion, icy synths, and a spaciousness that adds value when placed alongside heavier, more intense moments.
Metal Roundup Week of 12/8
Our metal roundup finds some violence every week, but this week seems especially dark, raw, and unapologetically heavy.
Agita by Imelda Marcos
Immensely underrated in the noise rock scene, we only hope that this release brings Imelda Marcos more much-deserved attention for their unique sound and undeniable talent.
Pariah by Among the Rocks and Roots
Opening up into segments of wider instrumentation and ear-splitting noise, these tracks meander through a misty pathway defined by different shades of anguish, through alternate expressions of the same fundamental image of lashing out at a mirror.
Everett by Body/Negative
The artist sits with their father on the last days of his life, the two looking out into the world and their pasts together with new eyes as time screeches to a halt.
Reliquary of Dusk by Ov Pain
Ov Pain wraps their music in circles, slowly descending further into their cave, incrementally adding elements and building tension before allowing the music to disappear into the far distance.
Letter 1 - Adaeh by Fatou
Fatou’s range is impressive, from her smooth jazzy vocals on “The other side”, to her energetic triplet flow on the title track “Adaeh”.
Harsh Reality by Stress Positions
Stress Positions feels wholly unsatisfied not only by the injustice and strife they name outright, but also by the feelings of monotony and hopelessness that come with accepting the status quo laid before them. They are absolutely fed up with the stagnation, perfectly encapsulating our deepest unsettlement with the world, Harsh Reality provides a moment to feel the weight of everything around you.
I by Musique Infinie
As electroacoustic, classical, and experimental electronic worlds collide on the collaborative album I by Musique Infinie, a rich, intricate, yet fundamentally minimalist style crystalizes.
Metal Roundup Week of 12/1
Whether it's the longer, darker nights, or the dropping temperature inspiring ice-cold riffs, it seems like the best metal releases always come out in the winter. See below for my top 3 picks for best metal albums this week.
Hip Hop Roundup Week of 12/1
It’s been a while, but this week had some hip hop releases that got us talking. Here’s the long-awaited continuation of our hip-hop roundup!
Frida and the Filibusters Bid Farewell and Fall Asunder by Cime
Frida and the Filibusters Bid Farewell and Fall Asunder embodies the anarchic energy and radical inclusivity that makes DIY music feel like home. As a live record, listeners are given a front row seat to CIME’s molotov cocktail of noise rock, freak folk, jazz, funk, Latin music, and art punk. While their sound is already explosive in-studio, CIME’s live work is even more intense and captivating. Conga percussion and swells of alto saxophone back Monty Cime’s expressive vocals, her voice strained to its limits in a performance that would draw any porch-dwellers back inside the house to catch this unmissable set.
The Vision of Saint Francis of Assisi by Saint Elisabeth
Where church tradition depicts such moments with choirs and organs, both musical elements with a clean, open sound that soars high above our physical bodies, Saint Elisabeth exhibits a willingness to engage with Jesus and Francis’s shared bodily nature.
KSA by Poison Damage
From just behind the horizon, however, a slow yet certain march encroaches, bringing with it bulletproof bureaucracy, unsolvable resource shortages, and factory farms.
Fol Naïs by Ni
With an anxious and in-your-face approach, ni downright refuses to fit in any one category as they explore techniques in black metal, avante-garde jazz, math rock, psychedelic prog metal, and more across this 10-track run.
Inside Noise Week of 12/1
This week, our Inside Noise roundup consists of one standout album all by itself: The Rime of Memory by Panopticon!
Bit Pieces by James McIlwrath
As an end result, these typically straightforward words become these abstract masses that convey more of a feeling than an actual concrete meaning.
The Hidden Anxieties of Imprecise Lines by Haunted Disco
Haunted Disco employs a variety of genres and styles that all get treated to a distinct lofi aesthetic, making every second of this release almost uncomfortably intimate.
A Small Crowd Gathered to Watch Me by Humour
Of course, the loose cannon vocals are this record’s crowning jewel, stringing together shrill screams, throaty yells, defeated speech, and wailing singing to tell a story of a deeply troubled person in the midst of a mental breakdown.
Metal Roundup Week of 11/24
From the dark and twisted to the beautiful and bright, this week brought us an incredible variety of great underground metal albums!